REFILE-Soccer-On the frontlines of the fight against match-fixing

February 20, 2013|Reuters

(Clarifies response in para 19)

By Himanshu Ojha and Keith Weir

LONDON, Feb 20 (Reuters) - A Georgian townhouse in a genteel, leafy London suburb houses a team of gambling experts huddled round dozens of computer screens showing match results from around the world. No bets are placed, however, no money won or lost. This is the frontline of the war on soccer match-fixing.

The multi-billion dollar soccer industry was shaken to its core earlier this month when European police and prosecutors said hundreds of games may have been rigged in a match-fixing syndicate being run from Singapore.

Helping soccer's governing bodies tackle the problem, companies such as Sportradar analyse betting odds movements to detect match-fixing, while FIFA has also set up an inhouse Early Warning System (EWS).

In Europe, a group of 15 leading bookmakers work together in the European Sports Security Association (ESSA), sharing information on suspicious betting patterns via e-mail.

But the scale of the problem, with World Cup qualifiers and Europe's flagship Champions Leagues under suspicion, as well as games in Asia, Africa and Latin America, necessitates a global solution, says former FIFA security director Chris Eaton.

"A warning system has got to be global - gambling is global," he told Reuters. "It's true to say that ESSA will pick up movements in the legal gambling area - for the most part it is illegal betting where the fixes are conducted."

Sportradar is part of an emerging industry that has grown up around official efforts to stamp out fixing in sports, especially soccer. The firm's employees monitor 300 or more bookmakers and more than 30,000 games a year for European soccer's governing body UEFA.

Ben Paterson, Sportradar's Integrity Manager, said his firm identifies between 250 and 300 suspicious soccer games every year, and that those figures show no sign of dropping off.

"A lot of people are doing a lot of things to curb match fixing, yet we still see the numbers maintained, if not increasing slightly," he added.

Although ESSA covers only a small part of the global market, it says it can give specific details on who is betting and where bets are placed to help prevent fixing before a game.

Bookmakers are linked by an email alerting system allowing its members to flag details of suspicious betting to each other and pass on details to sports bodies with whom they have ties.

Its advantage is that bookmakers know who made the bet and where. Its downside is that it is limited to Europe.

'BLUNT INSTRUMENT'

FIFA's system can monitor betting patterns but without the level of specific detail ESSA has. EWS also uses a network of contacts around the world to pass on intelligence and runs a whistleblower hotline. As well as FIFA games, it also monitors Major League Soccer in the United States and Japan's J League.

"EWS in FIFA is a small and capable organisation but it seems to me that they don't have a substantial field presence," said Eaton.

"Sportradar are probably the best there is for the present. While they are a commercial organisation, I would rather see them operating within an independent global body independent of sport and betting organisations."

Detection efforts are struggling to keep up, experts say, because of poor coordination between gambling companies and soccer's ruling bodies, while a lack of regulation in Asia means vital data is simply unavailable.

Mike O'Kane, chairman of ESSA, wants big Asia betting houses like Sbobet and Ibcbet to join forces with their European counterparts to fight fixing.

"I do call on all the European betting operators, in fact all global licensed operators, who are serious about protecting their company to join ESSA," he said.

Officals from the Philippine-based Sbobet and Ibcbet were not available to comment on the issue when contacted by Reuters.

A German investigator who helped jail 14 people for match-fixing was critical of the systems.

"Coming from our experiences of the last three years we have to say that these systems are not productive for our investigations as evidence in court," said Friedhelm Althans, investigator in the German city of Bochum.